Everyone comes to watch the sexy events like the 100m dash, where the winner at the Olympic Games gets to call himself "the fastest man in the world".

Meanwhile, events like the shot put, the pole vault and the discus go largely unnoticed.

However, this week in Eugene, which bills itself as "Tracktown USA", fans appreciate all the events at the Olympic team trials -- even the field events.

As my assignment here is to give good coverage to athletes with local ties, Sunday found me tracking pole vaulter Brad Walker and discus thrower Aretha Thurmond.

Photographers here at the trials are divided into two groups as far as getting access to the infield. We are all allowed to shoot at the end of the finish line. Bigger publications get blue vests which are "permanent" -- they can use those vest to access the infield all week. Smaller publications (including mine), are subject to sharing red, "temporary" vests, which allow us into the infield for an hour at a time.

I had to time my red vest session in order to shoot both the pole vault and the women's discus, which were occurring simultaneously.

Being a rookie here means I'm learning a lot every day. Today's lesson is that at the trials, you can put a remote with a wide-angle lens in the discus area. This is great because otherwise you're left shooting through the protective netting. It's not great if you hadn't done any proper planning and questioning like I failed to do, and were left shooting through said net.

I took my lumps, did my best, and made some frames of Thurmond during the discus competition.

Over at the men's pole vault, Brad Walker and some of the others were having a tough time with the wind, which was alternately blowing down and across the runway. Walker, of whom I need to make many photos, not only for daily coverage but also for Olympic preview stories, only made one successful jump all day. He missed on another and failed to get to the bar on the rest of his attempts.

I made a nice photo of Walker that I'm sure will run sometime between now and the opening of the Olympics in August. This one goes into the file.

Meanwhile, everyone at Hayward Field was waiting for the finals in the men's 100 meters, in which favorite Tyson Gay was running. Gay blew away the field in 9.68 seconds, the fastest time ever recorded in that event. However, the time was "wind-aided", meaning that the wind was measurably high enough that his record will not be official.

I was positioned well past the finish line, hoping to catch the runners after the finish as they burst into the sun with the shadowed part of the stands in the background. The planning worked out and I was able to catch all the runners glancing up at the amazing time. Gay is in blue, second from the right. It's a good frame, not a great one, and I'll be aiming to improve before the Olympics.